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Dive into the research topics where Erik Forestier is active.

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Featured researches published by Erik Forestier.


Leukemia | 2000

Improving outcome through two decades in childhood ALL in the Nordic countries: the impact of high-dose methotrexate in the reduction of CNS irradiation

G Gustafsson; Kjeld Schmiegelow; Erik Forestier; Niels Clausen; A Glomstein; G Jonmundsson; L Mellander; A Mäkipernaa; R Nygaard; Ulla M. Saarinen-Pihkala

In this population-based material from the five Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden), 2860 children below 15 years of age were diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) from July 1981 to June 1998. The annual incidence was 3.9/100 000 children and was stable throughout the study period. The development from regional or national protocols to common Nordic treatment protocols for all risk groups was completed in 1992 through a successive intensification with multidrug chemotherapy, including pulses of methotrexate in high doses and avoidance of cranial irradiation in most children. The overall event-free survival (EFS) at 5 years has increased from 56.5 ± 1.7% in the early 1980s to 77.6 ± 1.4% during the 1990s. The main improvements were seen in children with non-high risk leukemia. In high-risk patients, progress has been moderate, especially in children with high WBC (⩾100 × 109/l) at diagnosis. During the last time period (January 1992–June 1998), only 10% of the patients have received cranial irradiation in first remission, while 90% of the patients have received pulses of high dose methotrexate (5–8 g/m2) isolated or combined with high-dose cytosine arabinoside (total dose 12 g/m2) plus multiple intrathecal injections of methotrexate as CNS-targeted treatment, not translating into increased cumulative incidence of CNS relapse.


Leukemia | 2010

Long-term results of NOPHO ALL-92 and ALL-2000 studies of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Kjeld Schmiegelow; Erik Forestier; M Hellebostad; Melvin B. Heyman; Jon Kristinsson; Stefan Söderhäll; M Taskinen

Analysis of 2668 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) treated in two successive Nordic clinical trials (Nordic Society of Paediatric Haematology and Oncology (NOPHO) ALL-92 and ALL-2000) showed that 75% of all patients are cured by first-line therapy, and 83% are long-term survivors. Improvements in systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy have reduced the use of central nervous system (CNS) irradiation to <10% of the patients and provided a 5-year risk of isolated CNS relapse of 2.6%. Improved risk stratification and chemotherapy have eliminated the previous independent prognostic significance of gender, CNS leukemia and translocation t(1;19)(q23;p13), whereas the post-induction level of minimal residual disease (MRD) has emerged as a new risk grouping feature. Infant leukemia, high leukocyte count, T-lineage immunophenotype, translocation t(4;11)(q21;q23) and hypodiploidy persist to be associated with lower cure rates. To reduce the overall toxicity of the treatment, including the risk of therapy-related second malignant neoplasms, the current NOPHO ALL-2008 protocol does not include CNS irradiation in first remission, the dose of 6-mercaptopurine is reduced for patients with low thiopurine methyltransferase activity, and the protocol restricts the use of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in first remission to patients without morphological remission after induction therapy or with high levels of MRD after 3 months of therapy.


Leukemia | 2005

Long-term results in children with AML: NOPHO-AML Study Group – report of three consecutive trials

S O Lie; Jonas Abrahamsson; Niels Clausen; Erik Forestier; Henrik Hasle; Liisa Hovi; G Jonmundsson; L Mellander; M A Siimes; M Yssing; Bernward Zeller; G Gustafsson

In all, 447 children with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) have been treated on three consecutive NOPHO studies from July 1984 to December 2001. NOPHO-AML 84 was of moderate intensity with an induction of three courses of cytarabine, 6-thioguanine and doxorubicin followed by four consolidation courses with high-dose cytarabine. The 5-year event-free survival (EFS), disease free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) were 29, 37 and 38%. NOPHO-AML 88 was of high intensity with the addition of etoposide and mitoxantrone in selected courses during induction and consolidation. The interval between the induction courses should be as short as possible, that is, time intensity was introduced. The 5-year EFS, DFS and OS were 41, 48 and 46%. In NOPHO-AML 93, the treatment was stratified according to response to first induction course. The protocol utilised the same induction blocks as NOPHO-AML 88, but after the first block, children with a hypoplastic, nonleukaemic bone marrow were allowed to recover before the second block. Consolidation was identical with NOPHO-AML 88. The 5-year EFS, DFS and OS in NOPHO-AML 93 were 48, 52 and 65%. The new NOPHO-AML protocol has been based on experiences from previous protocols with stratification of patients with regard to in vivo response and specific cytogenetic aberrations.


Leukemia | 2010

Relapsed childhood high hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia: presence of preleukemic ancestral clones and the secondary nature of microdeletions and RTK-RAS mutations.

Josef Davidsson; Kajsa Paulsson; David Lindgren; Henrik Lilljebjörn; Tracy Chaplin; Erik Forestier; Mette K. Andersen; Ann Nordgren; Richard Rosenquist; Thoas Fioretos; Bryan D. Young; Bertil Johansson

Although childhood high hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia is associated with a favorable outcome, 20% of patients still relapse. It is important to identify these patients already at diagnosis to ensure proper risk stratification. We have investigated 11 paired diagnostic and relapse samples with single nucleotide polymorphism array and mutation analyses of FLT3, KRAS, NRAS and PTPN11 in order to identify changes associated with relapse and to ascertain the genetic evolution patterns. Structural changes, mainly cryptic hemizygous deletions, were significantly more common at relapse (P<0.05). No single aberration was linked to relapse, but four deletions, involving IKZF1, PAX5, CDKN2A/B or AK3, were recurrent. On the basis of the genetic relationship between the paired samples, three groups were delineated: (1) identical genetic changes at diagnosis and relapse (2 of 11 cases), (2) clonal evolution with all changes at diagnosis being present at relapse (2 of 11) and (3) clonal evolution with some changes conserved, lost or gained (7 of 11), suggesting the presence of a preleukemic clone. This ancestral clone was characterized by numerical changes only, with structural changes and RTK-RAS mutations being secondary to the high hyperdiploid pattern.


Leukemia | 2011

The frequency and prognostic impact of dic(9;20)(p13.2;q11.2) in childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia: results from the NOPHO ALL-2000 trial.

Vasilios Zachariadis; Fredrika Gauffin; Ekaterina Kuchinskaya; Melvin B. Heyman; Jacqueline Schoumans; Elisabeth Blennow; Britt Gustafsson; Gisela Barbany; Irina Golovleva; Hans Ehrencrona; Lucia Cavelier; Linda Palmqvist; Gudmar Lönnerholm; Magnus Nordenskjöld; Bertil Johansson; Erik Forestier; Agneta Nordgren

The dic(9;20)(p13.2;q11.2) is reported to be present in ∼2% of childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP ALL). However, it easily escapes detection by G-banding analysis and its true prevalence is hence unknown. We performed interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses—in a three-step manner—using probes for: (i) CDKN2A at 9p21, (ii) 20p and 20q subtelomeres and (iii) cen9 and cen20. Out of 1033 BCP ALLs diagnosed from 2001 to 2006, 533 were analyzed; 16% (84/533) displayed 9p21 deletions, of which 30% (25/84) had dic(9;20). Thus, dic(9;20)-positivity was found in 4.7% (25/533), making it the third most common genetic subgroup after high hyperdiploidy and t(12;21)(p13;q22). The dic(9;20) was associated with a female predominance and an age peak at 3 years; 18/25 (72%) were allocated to non-standard risk treatment at diagnosis. Including cases detected by G-banding alone, 29 dic(9;20)-positive cases were treated according to the NOPHO ALL 2000 protocol. Relapses occurred in 24% (7/29) resulting in a 5-year event-free survival of 0.69, which was significantly worse than for t(12;21) (0.87; P=0.002) and high hyperdiploidy (0.82; P=0.04). We conclude that dic(9;20) is twice as common as previously surmised, with many cases going undetected by G-banding analysis, and that dic(9;20) should be considered a non-standard risk abnormality.


Leukemia | 2005

Translocation t(1;19) is related to low cellular drug resistance in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.

Britt-Marie Frost; Erik Forestier; Göran Gustafsson; Peter Nygren; Marit Hellebostad; Gudmundur Jonmundsson; Jukka Kanerva; Kjeld Schmiegelow; Rolf Larsson; Gudmar Lönnerholm

Translocation t(1;19) is related to low cellular drug resistance in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia


Leukemia | 2009

Dic(9;20)(p13;q11) in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia is related to low cellular resistance to asparaginase, cytarabine and corticosteroids

Gudmar Lönnerholm; Ann Nordgren; Britt-Marie Frost; Olafur G. Jonsson; Jukka Kanerva; R. Nygaard; Kjeld Schmiegelow; Rolf Larsson; Erik Forestier

Dic(9;20)(p13;q11) in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia is related to low cellular resistance to asparaginase, cytarabine and corticosteroids


Blood | 2008

Age and Prognosis in Pediatric AML

Pernille Wendtland Edslev; Jonas Abrahamsson; Niels Clausen; Erik Forestier; Goeran Gustafsson; Jesper Heldrup; Liisa Hovi; Kirsi Jahnukainen; Gudmundur Jonmundsson; Josefine Palle; Bem Zeller; Henrik Hasle


Archive | 2013

outcome in patients with childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia DNA methylation for subtype classification and prediction of treatment

Mats G. Gustafsson; Gudmar Lönnerholm; Ann-Christine Syvänen; Mats Heyman; Gudmundur Jonmundsson; Jukka Kanerva; Kjeld Schmiegelow; Stefan Söderhäll; Lili Milani; Anders Lundmark; Anna Kiialainen; Jessica Nordlund; Trond Flægstad; Erik Forestier


Archive | 2013

doxorubicin and etoposide in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia Translocation t(12;21) is related to in vitro cellular drug sensitivity to

Jukka Kanerva; Rolf Larsson; Erik Forestier; Göran Gustafsson; Peter Nygren; Marit Hellebostad

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Britt-Marie Frost

Boston Children's Hospital

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Stefan Söderhäll

Karolinska University Hospital

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Jukka Kanerva

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Mats Heyman

Karolinska University Hospital

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Liisa Hovi

University of Helsinki

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